Knowledge Graphs: Trust, Privacy, and Transparency from a Legal Governance Approach DOI: https://doi.org /10.26826/law-in-context.v37i1.126 *** Daniel é o principal autor *** Although to this day there isn’t a precise definition of the term (Ehrlinger and Wöß 2016, Hogan et al, 2020), we adopt the view that a Knowledge Graph (KG) represents a network of interlinked descriptions of entities (objects, events, concepts etc.)-- a graph-theoretic representation of human knowledge such that it can be ingested with semantics by a machine (Kejriwal 2019). [A definição de KG] While the graph model or some variant has been used in several KGs, it has already been observed that using only atomic (indivisible) nodes as the “granule” of information is insufficient to express complex types of information, such as events, or time-varying data. This highlights the fact that data ultimately expresses a belief, opinion or point of view of some agent – the author. [Contexto temporal] [Considerar